Lee Mullican: Grey Art Gallery, New York University.Lee Mullican, who died in 1998, is one of the most important American abstract painters nobody knows--at least nobody on the East Coast (except perhaps some of those familiar with his son, Matt). Born in the "Indian territory" of central Oklahoma in 1919 and educated at the Kansas City Art Institute The Kansas City Art Institute (KCAI) is a private, independent, four-year college of fine arts and design founded in 1885 that has taught Walt Disney and other artists in Kansas City, Missouri. Ranked among the nation's top 10 art schools by U.S. , he found his way to California in the late '40s via a stint as an army cartographer. By the mid-'50s he was producing radiantly colored canvases characterized by precision knife work that resulted in shimmering shim·mer intr.v. shim·mered, shim·mer·ing, shim·mers 1. To shine with a subdued flickering light. See Synonyms at flash. 2. linear striations. His practice as a painter extended into the '70s and '80s, by which time he had long since been fascinated with Zen Buddhism and Hinduism. "Lee Mullican: An Abundant Harvest of Sun," Mullican's first museum retrospective (and his first solo museum show ever on the East Coast) was organized and curated by Carol S. Eliel for the Los Angeles County Museum of Art The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, also known as LACMA, is the official and world-renowned art museum of the County of Los Angeles, California, located on Wilshire Boulevard along Museum Row in the Miracle Mile vicinity of Los Angeles. , and recently traveled to New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of University's Grey Art Gallery, whose self-described mission is to present the works of great artists who never received their due. It wasn't that Mullican stayed away from New York: In the '50s and '60s, he was represented by and showed regularly at the esteemed Willard Gallery. But he made a decision not to become a "New York artist," preferring California (first San Francisco, then Los Angeles) to what he perceived as a closed society. Furthermore, he differed with the New York School New York school Painters who participated in the development of contemporary art, particularly Abstract Expressionism, in or around New York City in the 1940s and '50s. over his interest in "content," which was at odds with Abstract Expressionism and its nonnarrative, self-referential gestalt Gestalt (gəshtält`) [Ger.,=form], school of psychology that interprets phenomena as organized wholes rather than as aggregates of distinct parts, maintaining that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. . His paintings, neither fully figurative nor entirely abstract, were generated in relation to the intuitive contours of an inner world. The influence of Native American culture on Mullican's art is evident stylistically in the pictographic pic·to·graph n. In all senses also called pictogram. 1. A picture representing a word or idea; a hieroglyph. 2. A record in hieroglyphic symbols. 3. quality of his mark-making. Luminous Loot, 1948, Happily the Chiefs Regard You, and The Appointed (both 1949) contain a cornucopia cornucopia (kôr'ny kō`pēə), in Greek mythology, magnificent horn that filled itself with whatever meat or drink its owner requested. of geometric patterns and lively motifs
that suggest affinities with landscape as well as Indian weavings,
pottery, and wall drawings. Even schematic kachinas and other totemic
forms seem to materialize in the works' rhythmic interplay.
Mullican was in search of transcendental experience and drew parallels
between so-called primitive life--lived in direct relation to
nature--and the techniques of Surrealism, particularly that of automatic
drawing. His paintings, many of which are in sun-bright yellows, verge
on the hallucinatory hal·lu·ci·na·to·ryadj. 1. Of or characterized by hallucination. 2. Inducing or causing hallucination. and describe events that resemble cosmic explosions, collisions, and energy fields. Agawam Triptych, 1950, like Space and The Ninnekah (both 1951), zooms in close to the radiant faces of celestial orbs that spew dazzling streams of light into deep space. So why do we still hear so little about Mullican? This exhibition featured some forty-six paintings, twenty-four drawings, and ten sculptures--more than enough to show the merit of an artist who reflects a history of transcendental thinking in relation to the American landscape, and who intelligently invests European-style abstraction with interests both personal and pancultural. We're probably more open to regionalism re·gion·al·ism n. 1. a. Political division of an area into partially autonomous regions. b. Advocacy of such a political system. 2. Loyalty to the interests of a particular region. 3. in American art than we've ever been, so surely now is the time to reconsider the lopsided picture that results when we put New York at the absolute center. Mullican chose oblivion--aka Santa Monica--and by resisting the status quo, he laid a conceptual groundwork for artists with vision. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] |
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